![]() ![]() It renders nearly all marketing messages and newsletters as weird-looking at best, unreadable at worst. Typical users are never going to enable Mail’s option not to load remote content. What Hey offers - by default - is the ability to load regular images automatically, so your messages look “right”, but block all known images from tracking sources (which are generally 1×1 px invisible GIFs). But this is a throwing-the-baby-out-with-bath-water approach. ![]() It’s a setting for Mail on both Mac and iOS, and I know about it - I’ve had it enabled for years. ![]() In my piece yesterday about email tracking images (“spy pixels” or “spy trackers”), I complained about the fact that Apple - a company that rightfully prides itself for its numerous features protecting user privacy - offers no built-in defenses for email tracking.Ī slew of readers wrote to argue that Apple Mail does offer such a feature: the option not to load any remote resources at all. Apple Mail and Hidden Tracking Images Wednesday, 24 February 2021
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